The custom of above-ground burial in New Orleans is a mixture of
folklore and fact. New Orleans is certainly not the only city with a
high water table, but it has, at 90%, the largest percentage of above
ground burials. The first formal cemetery in New Orleans, the St. Peter
Street Cemetery was located in what is now the French Quarter. According
to accounts of the time, all burials were in the ground. Accounts of the
time also stated that when graves were dug, they frequently filled up
with water, resulting in watery graves.
When the graveyard was close to capacity, city officials established St.
Louis Cemetery #1. At the time, Esteban Miro was the governor of New
Orleans and his allegiance was to Spain. Therefore, when the St. Louis Cemetery was
developed, the wall vault system that was popular in Spain at the time
was adopted for those wishing to be buried stylishly above ground.
Ground burial also continued at St. Louis Cemetery.
Following a series of nasty epidemics in the early 1830's often blamed on
noxious fumes emitted by corpses, the city council
passed an ordinance requiring all further burials to take place on land
purchased on the Bayou St. John. But an important exemption was made:
burials could continue at the existing cemeteries if they were in tombs
and vaults in existing above-ground structures.
This fortified the tradition of above-ground burial for New Orleanians.
Even today, in Metairie Cemetery which is on high ground (by New Orleans
standards) 90% of burials are above ground. Interestingly, in the Jewish
section of Metairie Cemetery most burials are ground burials, keeping
with the traditions established in that culture.